Linux and Gaming: Full Steam Ahead

There's been virtually continuous
cause for celebration here in the Linux blogosphere over the last month or so, but it seems safe to say that few news items have caused quite as much jubilation as what greeted one tidbit last week, in particular.

"It has taken longer than most anyone would have anticipated, but the fact remains that Valve is in fact creating a native Linux port of their Steam game distribution client and of the Source Engine to run natively on Linux," read the announcement
on Phoronix on Wednesday.

Think gaming is trivial? Think again: In a matter of seconds, the topic was on fire
on Slashdot and throughout the Linux blogosphere.

Linux Girl was there -- cape-wearing, boots-clad avatar and Quick Quotes Quill at the ready.

'Fan-Freaking-Tastic News'

"Getting commercial game support from a large company such as Valve could be one of those things that could very well put Linux over the top as a competitor as a desktop operating system," Hoogland explained.

"Beyond this, with Valve taking note hopefully this will draw the attention of other large software development companies as well," he added. "I believe this news is significant to say the least :)"

'An Important Chicken-and-Egg Problem'

Indeed, "this is very significant," agreed Chris Travers, a Slashdot blogger who works on the LedgerSMB project.

In fact, "I think it just solved an important chicken-and-egg problem for Linux, which is the lack of commercial games," Travers opined. "This is important because the possibilities of commercial game development are different than the possibilities of open source game development."

Many Linux users are interested in gaming and playing commercial games, Travers explained, "and may be more interested in buying such games on average.

"So Valve may be making a generally smart business decision here," he concluded.

Beyond that, however, "the mere presence of Steam on Linux means it will be easier to get consumers to use Linux," Travers pointed out. "This opens up significant desktop markets for us."

'I'd Stand in Line Days for That'

Similarly, "I can't say how excited I am to see this happening," agreed Google+ blogger
Linux Rants. "It's great to see a company like Valve take such an interest in Linux, and I know it will save me a lot of time messing around with WINE personally."

Linux Rants is even more interested in what Valve's plans are for Linux in the future, however, "because it sounds like Steam for Linux is just the launching point of some greater initiative," he told Linux Girl. "A 'Steam Box' based on Linux competing with Xbox and Playstation could be awesome, and especially if it maintained compatibility with the desktop version of Steam for Linux.

"A game system whose games could be console or desktop based? I'd stand in line days for that," Linux Rants said.

"We have to keep in mind, though, that for this to be a success, the Linux community has to step up and make it a success for Valve," he cautioned. "Valve seeing huge success in Linux games could potentially encourage others to join the market. It's a great opportunity for the Linux community that we will be responsible for capitalizing on."

'Delivered Immediately'

The move "certainly gives credence to the idea of Steam producing a games console, even though they have more or less flatly denied this," opined
Hyperlogos blogger Martin Espinoza.

"There have been more and more indie games delivered by Steam lately, and many of them have Linux versions, so these games can be delivered immediately," Espinoza explained.

"Presumably, Source Engine games would follow, beginning with Valve's own titles," he added. "A lot of users would purchase the Half-Life and Portal games all over again if they could buy them for a Valve console via Steam."

'One of the Largest Missing Items'

Consultant and Slashdot blogger Gerhard Mack was equally excited.

"Finally, now I can play LAN parties without having to resort to a Windows install," Mack began.

"Seriously, though, Games have been one of the largest missing items from the home software setup for a long time; assuming they do a good job, this will be a good start to fixing that," he concluded.

'Over Two Years Old Now'

"Having another developer make games for Linux is always a good thing, but one developer will not make Linux a gaming platform," Lim opined. "Left 4 Dead 2, the first game Valve plans for the Linux platform, is over two years old now," Lim pointed out.

"Back in 2003, Bioware release a Linux client for Neverwinter nights -- a year after its original release for Windows -- and that did not convert Linux into a viable gaming platform," he noted. "The casual gamer on Linux will be happy to have a new game on Linux; those truly inclined for gaming will not be looking at a platform that gets games more than two years after its release."

'Two Major Problems'

Slashdot blogger hairyfeet had additional concerns.

"While Steam coming to Linux is nice, there are TWO major problems as I see it," hairyfeet began.

First, "how are you gonna have graphics-intensive games when the graphics subsystem is a mess?" he mused.

Second, meanwhile, is "whether or not the Linux community will tolerate Linux DRM, and whether it will be worth it with so many titles on Steam having Steam PLUS or some other form of DRM, be it SecurROM, Starforce, GFWL, or TAGES," hairyfeet explained.

'Most Already Dual-Boot'

"This isn't about getting existing Linux gamers onto Steam -- most already dual-boot or run Steam under Wine," noted Barbara Hudson, a blogger on Slashdot who goes by
"Tom" on the site.

There will soon be millions of perfectly good computers out there with an orphaned Windows XP OS, Hudson pointed out.

"While many of those PCs would in theory be upgradable to Windows 8, that's not going to happen," she explained. "After a couple of hours testing it, I have to agree with Valve's Gabe Newell -- Windows 8 is not just the worst product Microsoft has ever made."

'Enter SteamOS'

"PC manufacturers will be having coronaries trying to figure out what to do when Windows 7 is no longer available," she explained. "Enter SteamOS, SteamOffice, and SteamApps pre-installed.

"After all, porting a word processor is a lot easier than porting a high-end game, and people used to running full-featured applications locally will prefer it over any 'webbified office suite' or 'web paint brush' crippleware," she added. "And unlike the moribund WebOS, Steam already has all the ingredients: credibility with software publishers, a working distribution network, games, millions of users ... even 'the cloud' -- Steam Cloud."

Profits in the hardware world are "razor-thin," Hudson pointed out, but "Valve could offer all manufacturers -- pc, laptop, tablet, and mobile -- both a free OS license and a revenue-sharing deal.

"That's a move that could quickly pick up steam, while leaving Steve Ballmer steaming," she concluded. "Even 'social media smart TVs' and game consoles could be steam-rollered by 'Killer App' SteamTV."

'GNU/Linux Outperforms'

Last but not least, blogger
Robert Pogson is "not really into gaming," but he does know that "GNU/Linux outperforms that other OS in many areas.

"I expect if Nvidia and AMD wrote good drivers for Linux, there would not be any issue left preventing GNU/Linux from being a gaming platform," Pogson told Linux Girl. "Especially for multi-player gaming, the networking power of GNU/Linux should fit better than that other OS."

Katherine Noyes has been writing from behind Linux Girl's cape since late 2007, but she knows how to be a reporter in real life, too. She's particularly interested in space, science, open source software and geeky things in general. You can also
find her on Twitter and
Google+.